Guest guest Posted July 25, 2003 Report Share Posted July 25, 2003 You can make a ginger starter out of bacteria indigenous to ginger. Do you get Wise Traditions? Eisenstein has a recent article in it about how to do this. Basically you start with 2 tbsp ginger and 2 tbsp sugar, and you grind up the ginger and let them sit together for a day, and then for a week add 2 tbsp each every day. Easier solution for electrolyte-rich drinks: 1) put some salt in your water (ik) 2) lemon-water, 3)small amount of vinegar in water. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 25, 2003 Report Share Posted July 25, 2003 Oh good, it's online now. This is the end of the article, about methods. doesn't use whey, and I've had his drinks before-- they are absolutely superb and better than anything I've ever made with whey. I haven't tried his method yet but intend do in the future. The full article is at <A HREF= " http://www.westonaprice.org/foodfeatures/Realthing.html " >Weston A. Price Foundation: Reak Soft Drinks</A> Chris ARTISANAL HOME SODA FERMENTATION So let’s get down to making lacto-fermented soda—the real thing. The first step is simply to realize that it is very easy. The minimum equipment is a glass fermentation vessel and the minimum ingredients are sugar, water and the culture. Mix them together and fermentation happens. To make it really delicious, though, some pointers are in order. Step 1: Bring approximately 50 percent of your water to a boil and dissolve 1.5 cups of sugar in it for each gallon of soda you plan to make. If you are boiling roots in the water (see below), remove them before adding sugar. The sweet, somewhat viscous liquid you have now is called “syrup.†Step 2: Pour the syrup and the remaining water into your fermentation vessel. I like to use the scalding hot syrup to sterilize my vessel, but be careful not to pour it in too fast or it could crack. The resulting diluted syrup is still too hot for the culture. You can either wait, or cool the syrup first by letting the pot sit in a sinkful of cold water before adding it to the vessel. Step 3: Add any other flavorings, such as lemon juice (see below) to the diluted syrup. Step 4: Making sure the syrup has cooled to body temperature, add about a cupful of culture for each gallon of water. You could add less culture, but the more you add, the greater the head start your beneficial bacteria have over any opportunistic invaders, such as alcohol-producing yeasts. Step 5: Cover the vessel (it need not be completely airtight, but it can be) and let it ferment. Fermentation rate is highly variable. If you like a sweeter soda, four or five days might be sufficient. If you want to ferment out most of the sugar, allow at least 10 days. Some additives such as mint and honey tend to inhibit bacteria and drastically slow fermentation. Step 6: Time to bottle! Brewing supply stores carry siphon tubes to siphon the soda directly from carboy to bottle, but if you are fermenting in a jar you can simply pour it into bottles or scoop it in with a glass measuring cup. You must have some way to seal the bottles, either with a bottle capper or stoppered bottles (both available at brewing supply stores). Do not bottle the thick layer of sediment at the bottom of the fermentation vessel. Step 7: Carbonation. The soda continues to ferment in the bottles, giving off carbon dioxide gas. Since the bottles are sealed, the gas has nowhere to go. In stays in the bottle and makes the soda fizzy. Depending on how fast it is fermenting, 2-5 days is usually enough time to create the optimum level of carbonation. You can always open a bottle and check. Step 8: Stopping fermentation. Now we have a problem, because if the soda continues to ferment the bottles will foam over or spray when opened. The bottles might even explode if left out long enough. So when carbonation is sufficient, it is time to stop fermentation by putting the bottles in the refrigerator. Not enough room? A cold basement will work too, slowing down fermentation but not quite stopping it. Usually soda will keep just fine in the basement for a month or more. Step 9: Drink it! Lacto-fermented soda is an excellent thirst quencher and contains beneficial lactic acid, vitamins, enzymes and beneficial lactobacilli that can inhabit your gut, where they protect you against pathogenic bacteria and yeast. Sidebar Article HOMEMADE SODA BASICS THE VESSEL: A one- or two-gallon glass jar is fine, but if you want to make larger quantities you’ll need a glass carboy, readily available at brewing supply stores for under $20. The five-gallon size works best. For a few cents you can also purchase a water lock, which bubbles merrily away as your soda ferments. All utensils should be clean, but antiseptic cleanliness is unnecessary. Usually we rinse the vessel a few times with water and sterilize it with the hot syrup for next batch. OTHER EQUIPMENT: You will need bottles with good stoppers—a strong, tight cork, a beer bottle top, or a stopper held down with a wire. These are available at brewing stores and also at places like the Container Store. You will also need a funnel or siphon for transfering the soda from the vessel into bottles. THE WATER: Do not use chlorinated tap water, as this will inhibit fermentation. Most filtered or bottled water works fine. If you must use straight tap water, boil it to evaporate off the chlorine. THE SUGAR: We have gotten good results with sucanat, rice malt, maple sugar, jaggery, honey, and apple cider. The flavor from rapadura or molasses is too strong for most people. Honey is delicious but is best used as a flavoring rather than the main sugar source, because apparently honey inhibits bacterial growth. Even at half strength, honey soda can take months to finish. You can use fruit juice, but for some reason commercial canned fruit juice, even organic brands, produce noxious results. Fresh-pressed apple cider produces delicious soda, although it will probably be slightly alcoholic (1-2%) due to natural yeasts on the apples. Remember that most of the sugar will be converted into lactic acid in the fermentation process. Use about 1.5 cups of sugar per gallon of water. THE CULTURE: You can use a bottle of soda from the last batch as culture, or you can make your own from scratch. Dice fresh ginger root into tiny cubes and put a tablespoon of it into a mason jar 3/4 full of water, along with 2 teaspoons white sugar. Add another 2 teaspoons each sugar and ginger every day for a week, at which time it should become bubbly with a pleasant odor. If it gets moldy, dump it and start over. Even a small amount of culture will start a batch of soda going, but it’s best to use at least a cup per gallon so that these beneficial lactobacilli can dominate before less desirable microorganisms have a chance. FLAVORINGS: The water used to dissolve the sugar need not be just water! You can use any herbal decoction to make soda with the flavor or medicinal qualities you are seeking. For example, to make ginger beer, boil sliced ginger root in the water, about one thumb’s-length per gallon of soda, for twenty minutes. Peppermint, spearmint, or other mint can also be used to flavor soda. Put the mint in boiling water, turn off the heat immediately, cover and steep. Lemon juice is a good addition to almost any soda flavor and seems to help preserve the syrup before fermentation gets going. Use approximately two lemons per gallon of soda, depending on juiciness. One of the favorite beverages in colonial America was root beer. Any roots can go into root beer, but the essential ones for flavor are sassafras and sarsaparilla. Sassafras in particular lends a pungent aroma and beautiful reddish color to soda, and is readily available throughout the Eastern US. Common medicinal roots like burdock, chicory, dandelion, and so forth tend to impart a strong mediciney “herbal†flavor to the soda. It’s the sassafras or sarsaparilla that make people say “Yum!† This article appeared in Wise Traditions in Food, Farming and the Healing Arts, the quarterly magazine of the Weston A. Price Foundation, Spring 2003 This page was posted on 06/30/03 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 25, 2003 Report Share Posted July 25, 2003 cric, You have to use sugar for a lacto-fermented drink, or there's nothing for the bacteria to feed off of. It probably *wouldn't* be strong, because the bacteria wouldn't be able to make much lactic acid. If you don't want to use sugar, use dehydrated cane juice (Rapadura), maple syrup, maple sugar, etc. Or you could use some sort of fruit juice if you want. But you need carbs for the bacteria to feed off of. Carrots are pretty carby and might produce a good drink, as the sugars/starches that don't get made into lactic acid will probably be broken down into sugars, so it would probably taste good, but I'd use sugar for the starter to get it going. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 26, 2003 Report Share Posted July 26, 2003 ---If you don't use whey what do you want to ferment with? The small amount of whey basically provides the micro's for ferment. You might use the kefir but I've not tried it. You can drink the whey ferment all day more or less can't you? Dennis In , " cricjohnson " <cricjohnson@y...> wrote: > i am looking to make a fermented drink (possibly beet kvass, or > something with carrots, celery, and ginger) without using whey. > > the purpose is to have an replenishing, electrolyte-rich concoction > to drink in place of water all day. > > does anyone know if this is possible? > > thanks, > > cric johnson :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 26, 2003 Report Share Posted July 26, 2003 thanks for the reply dennis. the problem with the whey is that i do not tolerate dairy. i know, for instance, that with the cultured beets and carrots, i don't add either whey or salt. i just chop 'em up and toss 'em in the crock for about a week. they work up great. it's just that with a drink i don't know if the same rule would apply. cric :-) -- In , " dkemnitz2000 " <dkemnitz2000@y...> wrote: > ---If you don't use whey what do you want to ferment with? The small > amount of whey basically provides the micro's for ferment. You might > use the kefir but I've not tried it. You can drink the whey ferment > all day more or less can't you? Dennis > > > > > In , " cricjohnson " > <cricjohnson@y...> wrote: > > i am looking to make a fermented drink (possibly beet kvass, or > > something with carrots, celery, and ginger) without using whey. > > > > the purpose is to have an replenishing, electrolyte-rich concoction > > to drink in place of water all day. > > > > does anyone know if this is possible? > > > > thanks, > > > > cric johnson :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 26, 2003 Report Share Posted July 26, 2003 thanks for the reply chris. i think i have read about this ginger concotion in " nourishing traditions " . the thing is, i don't want to use sugar, as the recipe calls for. if it's just for the starter, and the final product has little sugar, that would be acceptable. the only problem is that a ginger drink without sweetener would be pretty strong. any ideas? cric :-) In , ChrisMasterjohn@a... wrote: > You can make a ginger starter out of bacteria indigenous to ginger. Do you > get Wise Traditions? Eisenstein has a recent article in it about how > to do this. Basically you start with 2 tbsp ginger and 2 tbsp sugar, and you > grind up the ginger and let them sit together for a day, and then for a week > add 2 tbsp each every day. > > Easier solution for electrolyte-rich drinks: 1) put some salt in your water > (ik) 2) lemon-water, 3)small amount of vinegar in water. > > Chris > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 26, 2003 Report Share Posted July 26, 2003 >the purpose is to have an replenishing, electrolyte-rich concoction >to drink in place of water all day. > >does anyone know if this is possible? The pioneers did this -- they called it " cider " . Put some fresh apple juice in a barrel on the porch, wait a few days. Personally I put the apple juice in a bottle and add a kefir grain. Decant the cider after a day or two and drink it, then add more apple juice (leave the grain and a little cider in there to start the next batch). If you use diluted juice, it will probably be better to drink " all day " -- the more sugar you have to start with, the highter the alcohol content. You can even use something like cabbage juice to start with, though I have not tried that. But any juice works, and slices of ginger make it nice too. You can use the same kefir grain for a LONG time, so you aren't getting any great amount of " milk " (rinse the grain before you start). I ferment mine dry -- there is little if any sugar left (it doesn't make my teeth mossy, which is my key to sugar content!). -- Heidi -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 26, 2003 Report Share Posted July 26, 2003 Hi, I have been using a symbiotic culture of organisms called EM in things like kim chi. I also add it to vegetable juice. Here is some info. http://www.rawpaleodiet.org/em/ What about drinking the water of young coconuts? > i am looking to make a fermented drink (possibly beet kvass, or > something with carrots, celery, and ginger) without using whey. > > the purpose is to have an replenishing, electrolyte-rich concoction > to drink in place of water all day. > > does anyone know if this is possible? > > thanks, > > cric johnson :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 26, 2003 Report Share Posted July 26, 2003 Quoting Joe <jzbozzi@...>: > Hi, I have been using a symbiotic culture of organisms called EM in > things like kim chi. I also add it to vegetable juice. Here is > some info. > > http://www.rawpaleodiet.org/em/ Careful with this--I thought my allergies had disappeared, but they came back pretty strong when I started drinking EM-cultured molasses. > What about drinking the water of young coconuts? I tried fermenting coconut water with kefir grains, and that turned out pretty well. -- Berg bberg@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 26, 2003 Report Share Posted July 26, 2003 Heidi, They drank it hard for the most part to my understanding. Would it be hard cider after a few days? The kefir bacteria would get out most or all of the alcohol from the kefir yeasts, which would make much better for an all-day drink! Chris In a message dated 7/26/03 1:01:54 AM Eastern Daylight Time, heidis@... writes: > > The pioneers did this -- they called it " cider " . Put some fresh apple > juice in a barrel on the porch, wait a few days. > > Personally I put the apple juice in a bottle and add a kefir > grain. Decant the cider after a day or two and drink it, > then add more apple juice (leave the grain and a little > cider in there to start the next batch). If you use diluted > juice, it will probably be better to drink " all day " -- the more > sugar you have to start with, the highter the alcohol content. > > You can even use something like cabbage juice to start > with, though I have not tried that. But any juice works, > and slices of ginger make it nice too. You can use the > same kefir grain for a LONG time, so you aren't getting > any great amount of " milk " (rinse the grain before you > start). I ferment mine dry -- there is little if any sugar > left (it doesn't make my teeth mossy, which is my > key to sugar content!). > " To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public. " --Theodore Roosevelt Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 27, 2003 Report Share Posted July 27, 2003 Heidi, In a message dated 7/27/03 2:59:01 AM Eastern Daylight Time, heidis@... writes: > The bigger the yeast/bacteria ratio, the more alcohol. They DID drink cider > all day, > men, women, and children, and Jefferson is said to have started his > day > with a quart of the stuff. Which makes me think the alchohol content wasn't > as high as the pure-yeast cider that is made today. That and it was sitting > on > the porch all winter ... I'd guess it was actually pretty sour. However, > some > people have said it was very alcoholic. All I've read about it is a couple articles that mentioned cider consumption in New England around 1830s, or 1790s-1840s, and what I've read said it was hard cider, despite that the whole family drank it as their primary drink. Not feeding kids alcohol is a modern thing ;-) The Founding Fathers were pot-heads anyway. Yes, I know, hemp has other uses. But someone in an American Revolution class I took did a research paper and presentation on Washington's hemp-growing and found some evidence, such as writings about separating the males and females (which is useful only if you want THC-producing buds!), that indicated he was smokin it up. So Jefferson starting the day with a quart of hard cider doesn't surprise me! Chris > > Anyway, mine seems moderately alcoholic -- not as much as beer, and > I can drink a quart and not be drunk in any sense. The sugar is all > converted to *something* though, or most of it. Usually when we make > beer, we let it ferment at least a week, but that is a pure yeast ferment. > I've heard numbers in the half to one percent alcohol range for > kefir-ale, but it would depend on how much sugar was in the juice. > > " To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public. " --Theodore Roosevelt Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 27, 2003 Report Share Posted July 27, 2003 >Heidi, > >They drank it hard for the most part to my understanding. Would it be hard >cider after a few days? The kefir bacteria would get out most or all of the >alcohol from the kefir yeasts, which would make much better for an all-day >drink! > >Chris The bigger the yeast/bacteria ratio, the more alcohol. They DID drink cider all day, men, women, and children, and Jefferson is said to have started his day with a quart of the stuff. Which makes me think the alchohol content wasn't as high as the pure-yeast cider that is made today. That and it was sitting on the porch all winter ... I'd guess it was actually pretty sour. However, some people have said it was very alcoholic. Anyway, mine seems moderately alcoholic -- not as much as beer, and I can drink a quart and not be drunk in any sense. The sugar is all converted to *something* though, or most of it. Usually when we make beer, we let it ferment at least a week, but that is a pure yeast ferment. I've heard numbers in the half to one percent alcohol range for kefir-ale, but it would depend on how much sugar was in the juice. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 27, 2003 Report Share Posted July 27, 2003 >All I've read about it is a couple articles that mentioned cider consumption >in New England around 1830s, or 1790s-1840s, and what I've read said it was >hard cider, despite that the whole family drank it as their primary drink. Not >feeding kids alcohol is a modern thing ;-) Actually I read in one WHO document about fermentation that worldwide, people get some large percentage of their calories from alcohol, traditionally. A lot of stuff people eat digests better when fermented, and that means some percentage of ethanol, plus, heck, people LIKE getting a bit high. I tend to think though, that drinking drinks like lacto-fermented cider isn't really as " high " as we tend to associate with booze, and if you drink the same amount constantly you would tend to get used to that level of alcohol. Alcohol became a serious problem when people invented pure yeast ferments and distilling. Chewing coca leaves was never a great problem either, until folks started extracting pure cocaine! -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2003 Report Share Posted July 29, 2003 In a message dated 7/27/03 2:16:35 PM Eastern Daylight Time, heidis@... writes: > I tend > to think though, that drinking drinks like lacto-fermented cider isn't > really as " high " as we tend to associate with booze, and if you drink > the same amount constantly you would tend to get used to that > level of alcohol. Yeah, like " small beer. " Alcohol became a serious problem when people invented > pure yeast ferments and distilling. Hmm, there were big alcohol problems in the early 19th century, hence the Temperance Movement. At the shoe shop in OSV, we are proud members of the Boston INtemperance Society. Chewing coca leaves was never > a great problem either, until folks started extracting pure cocaine! Indeed, as Price found Aborigines who chewed on coca all day long. Wonder how that relates to the opioid theory... Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2003 Report Share Posted July 29, 2003 >Alcohol became a serious problem when people invented >> pure yeast ferments and distilling. > >Hmm, there were big alcohol problems in the early 19th century, hence the >Temperance Movement. At the shoe shop in OSV, we are proud members of the Boston >INtemperance Society. Exactly. Around that time every British sailor got his ration of rum too ... and they were learning to make non-lacto-fermented beer no doubt (much of the point of modern beer and wine making is to increase the alcohol content, using specialized yeasts and by preventing the lactobacilli from growing). People have gotten drunk forever -- the Romans were good at it -- but it got a lot worse when stills were invented (probably cheap sugar didn't help either). Anyway, I can drink kefir cider all night, but one martini and I'm done for. You CAN make a pretty high-alcohol cider out of apple juice, but it is more work and looking at the way the pioneers did it, I'd guess theirs wasn't too high in alcohol. But what is a " shoe shop in OSV? " >Chewing coca leaves was never >> a great problem either, until folks started extracting pure cocaine! > >Indeed, as Price found Aborigines who chewed on coca all day long. Wonder >how that relates to the opioid theory... Good question. I'd guess if you just chewed the leaves, you'd get accustomed to that amount of opium, as it would be difficult to keep increasing the dose. When folks are on morphine for pain management, the mental effects decrease even though the pain killing remains the same -- if you are taking morphine for the " high " you have to keep increasing the dose. Which is interesting in terms of autistic kids -- if the gluten or casein was acting like normal opioids, they should just " get used " to it? Maybe: A. Gluten and casein act as opioids for EVERYONE, but the autistic people lack the capacity to adapt to it. Or, B. Gluten and casein don't act like normal opioids (or like ANY opioids, maybe it is a different reaction). -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2003 Report Share Posted July 29, 2003 In a message dated 7/29/03 1:20:47 AM Eastern Daylight Time, heidis@... writes: > Anyway, I can drink kefir cider all night, but one martini > and I'm done for. You CAN make a pretty high-alcohol cider out of apple > juice, but it is more work and looking at the way the pioneers did it, I'd > guess theirs wasn't too high in alcohol. > I'm just wondering whether rural people who made their own cider used these yeasts or not. I have no idea. > But what is a " shoe shop in OSV? " > Ha! Old Sturbridge Village, where I'm working right now, is a living history museum. Sometimes I work in the shoe shop where we bottom shoes. On those days, I'm actually in Shoes/Pottery or " Shpots " as they now call it, and in all truth I try to avoid going to shoes and stay in potter if I can :-) Anyway there is a sign on the wall which I believe to be a copy of an authentic for the Boston Intemperance Society with a bunch of resolutions bashing the Temperance Movement. Shoe shops were where people would bottom shoes. They were usually young people doing piece work for a manufacturer, and they rented space in the shoe shop for social reasons, b/c shoe-making is boring, and they usually drank some kind of liquor while they worked. > Good question. I'd guess if you just chewed the leaves, you'd > get accustomed to that amount of opium, as it would be difficult to > keep increasing the dose. When folks are on morphine for pain > management, the mental effects decrease even though the > pain killing remains the same -- if you are taking morphine > for the " high " you have to keep increasing the dose. Which > is interesting in terms of autistic kids -- if the gluten or casein > was acting like normal opioids, they should just " get used " to > it? Maybe: > > A. Gluten and casein act as opioids for EVERYONE, but the autistic > people lack the capacity to adapt to it. Or, > > B. Gluten and casein don't act like normal opioids (or like ANY opioids, > maybe it is a different reaction). So much on which to wonder... :-) Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2003 Report Share Posted July 29, 2003 >I'm just wondering whether rural people who made their own cider used these >yeasts or not. I have no idea. According to the cookbooks, they saved yeast cultures, sometimes by drying them into little yeast-balls, when they got a " good one " going. I'm sure they didn't use cultures like I used to use -- those come in little foil packets, packaged specially and kept in a fridge. My Mom says when they made cider, they just pressed it and let it set in barrels -- the apples are coated in yeast (that's the white stuff that covers apples and grapes). But unless you boil the cider, you will get lactobacilli in it also, I believe. >> But what is a " shoe shop in OSV? " >> > >Ha! Old Sturbridge Village, where I'm working right now, is a living history >museum. Sometimes I work in the shoe shop where we bottom shoes. On those >days, I'm actually in Shoes/Pottery or " Shpots " as they now call it, and in all >truth I try to avoid going to shoes and stay in potter if I can :-) Anyway >there is a sign on the wall which I believe to be a copy of an authentic for >the Boston Intemperance Society with a bunch of resolutions bashing the >Temperance Movement. Shoe shops were where people would bottom shoes. They were >usually young people doing piece work for a manufacturer, and they rented space in >the shoe shop for social reasons, b/c shoe-making is boring, and they usually >drank some kind of liquor while they worked. Wow! That sounds like a fun job. So you are " bottoming shoes " like they did in the old days? And getting paid for it? I could come man the spinning wheel .... -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2003 Report Share Posted July 29, 2003 In a message dated 7/29/03 5:38:23 PM Eastern Daylight Time, heidis@... writes: > Wow! That sounds like a fun job. So you are " bottoming shoes " like they did > in the old days? And getting paid for it? I could come man the spinning > wheel ... The pay is crap and right now there is a hiring freeze but if you don't mind dressing in 1830s clothes and you can get used to saying " good day " instead of hello there's room for a spinner. You can spin the wool I card in the carding mill ;-) Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 2003 Report Share Posted July 30, 2003 >The pay is crap and right now there is a hiring freeze but if you don't mind >dressing in 1830s clothes and you can get used to saying " good day " instead of >hello there's room for a spinner. You can spin the wool I card in the >carding mill ;-) > >Chris Well, when I make my second million on our app I'll work for free. Or maybe we should set up shop in Hawaii as a " Pre captain Cook " Hawaiian village ... -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 5, 2003 Report Share Posted August 5, 2003 , How long did you drink the EM brew? Did you switch to another or give it up entirely? On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 19:27:32 -0700 Berg <bberg@...> wrote: > Quoting Joe <jzbozzi@...>: > > > Hi, I have been using a symbiotic culture of organisms called EM in > > things like kim chi. I also add it to vegetable juice. Here is > > some info. > > > > http://www.rawpaleodiet.org/em/ > > Careful with this--I thought my allergies had disappeared, but they came > back pretty strong when I started drinking EM-cultured molasses. > > > What about drinking the water of young coconuts? > > I tried fermenting coconut water with kefir grains, and that turned out > pretty well. > > -- > Berg > bberg@... " Humans live on one-quarter of what they eat; on the other three-quarters lives their doctor. " --Egyptian pyramid inscription, 3800 B.C. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 5, 2003 Report Share Posted August 5, 2003 Did you substitute the whey with EM in a 1 to 1 ratio or more or less? Re: Re: fermented drinks without whey , How long did you drink the EM brew? Did you switch to another or give it up entirely? On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 19:27:32 -0700 Berg <bberg@...> wrote: > Quoting Joe <jzbozzi@...>: > > > Hi, I have been using a symbiotic culture of organisms called EM in > > things like kim chi. I also add it to vegetable juice. Here is > > some info. > > > > http://www.rawpaleodiet.org/em/ > > Careful with this--I thought my allergies had disappeared, but they came > back pretty strong when I started drinking EM-cultured molasses. > > > What about drinking the water of young coconuts? > > I tried fermenting coconut water with kefir grains, and that turned out > pretty well. > > -- > Berg > bberg@... " Humans live on one-quarter of what they eat; on the other three-quarters lives their doctor. " --Egyptian pyramid inscription, 3800 B.C. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 19, 2003 Report Share Posted September 19, 2003 Fresh cider (apple juice) turns delightfully bubbly just sitting in the frig. I wouldn't think they worried about any special yeasts. Peace, Kris , gardening in harmony with nature in northwest Ohio http://home.woh.rr.com/billkrisjohnson/ For good news about beef, raised and finished on pasture: http://home.woh.rr.com/billkrisjohnson/Kris/GoodNewsPage.htm Re: fermented drinks without whey > In a message dated 7/29/03 1:20:47 AM Eastern Daylight Time, > heidis@... writes: > > > Anyway, I can drink kefir cider all night, but one martini > > and I'm done for. You CAN make a pretty high-alcohol cider out of apple > > juice, but it is more work and looking at the way the pioneers did it, I'd > > guess theirs wasn't too high in alcohol. > > > > I'm just wondering whether rural people who made their own cider used these > yeasts or not. I have no idea. > > > But what is a " shoe shop in OSV? " > > > > Ha! Old Sturbridge Village, where I'm working right now, is a living history > museum. Sometimes I work in the shoe shop where we bottom shoes. On those > days, I'm actually in Shoes/Pottery or " Shpots " as they now call it, and in all > truth I try to avoid going to shoes and stay in potter if I can :-) Anyway > there is a sign on the wall which I believe to be a copy of an authentic for > the Boston Intemperance Society with a bunch of resolutions bashing the > Temperance Movement. Shoe shops were where people would bottom shoes. They were > usually young people doing piece work for a manufacturer, and they rented space in > the shoe shop for social reasons, b/c shoe-making is boring, and they usually > drank some kind of liquor while they worked. > > > Good question. I'd guess if you just chewed the leaves, you'd > > get accustomed to that amount of opium, as it would be difficult to > > keep increasing the dose. When folks are on morphine for pain > > management, the mental effects decrease even though the > > pain killing remains the same -- if you are taking morphine > > for the " high " you have to keep increasing the dose. Which > > is interesting in terms of autistic kids -- if the gluten or casein > > was acting like normal opioids, they should just " get used " to > > it? Maybe: > > > > A. Gluten and casein act as opioids for EVERYONE, but the autistic > > people lack the capacity to adapt to it. Or, > > > > B. Gluten and casein don't act like normal opioids (or like ANY opioids, > > maybe it is a different reaction). > > > So much on which to wonder... :-) > > Chris > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.